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Andrew Jackson was a man of terrible passions. He tried to keep them in check, to show the world that he was a man of duty and honor, a soldier and statesman, a God-fearing son and husband of pious women. And when his passions boiled over, as they so often did, he could only blame a corrupt world for not seeing how hard he had tried. He never forgot insults, because he saw them as attacks not on him alone but on all that was good and innocent, brave and pure, virtuous and vulnerable.My Book, The Movie: Avenging the People.
In other words, he took himself very seriously, and he was ready to die—preferably to kill—to make sure that everyone else did as well.
The actor who plays such a man would have to...[read on]
--Marshal Zeringue